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Q: Is it good for the Postie to carry
treats?
It
may seem like an obvious thing to feed treats when anyone wants to make friends
with a dog. But it can make the situation worse – in most cases the dogs are
actually frightened of the postman and they will either refuse the treats (in
which case it is pointless) or they will develop what we call a ‘conflict of
emotions’ – the dog wants to go forward to get the treat, but is scared, wants
the treat, is scared, treat, scared, treat, scared – this is a very
uncomfortable situation emotionally.
On
the rare occasion that the postman feeding your dog treats does improve their
relationship your dog may well expect anybody who looks or acts like a postman
to feed him/her – when no food is forthcoming then the dog will become confused
or frustrated and will start to resent the stranger – certainly not conducive
to a happy relationship.
It
is much better that any treats or praise or comfort comes from the owner. This
means that the dog is not forced to approach the scary stranger and the owner
can give a reward of some type whenever the dog is not reacting adversely to
another person.
However
it may be useful for a postman to carry some treats with him/her – not to give
to the dog – but to scatter on the ground (a little distance away from them) to
try to distract a dog while they leave the premises. But do bear in mind that,
if the dog is too scared, he will not be interested in the food.
Q: My dog hurts himself crashing into
the letter box when letters are coming through- what can I do?
Q: My dog rips the letters out of the
postman’s hands and I worry he will hurt him!
Q: My dog cocks his leg at the door
when the postman arrives- what can I do?
With
all the above, ensure that your dog is out of the way or preoccupied whenever
the post arrives.
Q: My dog developed a hatred for the
postman a few months ago, out of the blue! All was fine before. Why?
I
think the obvious answer is that something changed…. either a different
postman, or the same postman who actually spoke to your dog through the door,
or something scary happened at exactly the time that the post was delivered ,
or something else in your dog’s life changed so that he was less able to cope with
the postman arriving.
Q: Is it true that dogs can pick up on
the fear of the postman?
This
is a question that the scientists have been trying to answer for some time now,
trying to find the proof (or otherwise) that dogs can smell fear.
Personally
I do believe that our dogs can tune into our emotions – your own dog will
behave differently towards you depending on if you are happy or upset or ill –
so the only answer I can give is ‘maybe’.
Q: My dog loves the postie if he is in
the garden with him but barks aggressively if he sees him while he is in the
house, why?
Some
people may consider this to be a territorial matter – but doggy things (and
thoughts) are never that simple…
The
vast majority of dogs will learn things ‘contextually’ – that means that, unlike
us, they find it very difficult to understand that the postie in the garden is
the same person as the one they see outside.
Q: Posties wear red, is this a colour
that can wind dogs up?
A
lot of people still believe that dogs only see in black and white – in fact
they do see many colours but are red-green colourblind – therefore they don’t
distinguish the colour red. What they are very good at is identifying patterns
and logos – so for dogs that react to any postman it could be the ‘pattern‘ on
the uniform that the dog associates with these particular strangers.
Specific
email questions
Q: My dog goes crazy when the postman arrive
he runs up and down the hall to the door barking and growling. He stares out
the window barking then when the letters drop he grabs and shakes them around.
Please could u give me some tips to help?
This sounds like quite a severe reaction that your dog has to the postman. By
far the easiest solution is to install an external postbox – this means that
your dog will no longer feel ‘under attack’ from the postman and will not fly
into such a panic. Avoid allowing your
dog to look out of the window when the postman is due – take him out for a walk
or play with him in the garden.
In
order to fully resolve this you are going to need some help in setting up a
desensitisation program for your dog – contact a reputable behaviourist through
APBC or ABTC.
Q: I saw this contact on
Facebook, can I ask a question regarding Woody’s behaviour meeting with other
dogs over the park. When he sees strange dogs he runs at them barking and acts
aggressively. I would like to modify this, I would be grateful for any advice.
There are several reasons for a dog to react this way to other dogs – he may
have been attacked, bitten or even just frightened by a dog in the past, he may
not have had the opportunity as a puppy to learn how to properly communicate
and socialise with other dogs.
Your
dog will not improve on his own and he may well become more and more aggressive
as time goes on.
You
should really seek the help of a reputable behaviourist (APBC or ABTC) to help
identify the cause and thus the best way forward for your dog. Professional
Behaviourists will have a ‘stooge dog’ available to help – this is a dog that
has an exceptionally good temperament with other dogs and can teach your dog
not to be afraid and how to communicate appropriately.
Q: If you go onto my Facebook homepage
you'll see a video clip taken on my phone of how my dog reacts when a postman
or anyone tries to put mail through our letter box.
Poppy, the most adorable little dog
you will ever have the pleasure of meeting, literally goes from the friendliest
to the most aggressive dog once she sees a postman approaching our house.
Yes, I would love some advice! Thank
you in advance.
In
severe cases like this you must do everything you can to avoid the situation.
It really is unfair to put Poppy through this turmoil and panic as she is
basically very frightened when mail pops through the door .Take Poppy out for a
walk or play with her in another room or the back garden whenever the postman
is due. Consider installing an external postbox.
Consider
contacting a reputable behaviourist (through APBC or ABTC) to help.
Q: Our westie is a barker...and we
have problems handling this. We are sure
other exhibits of aggression in certain situations are as a result of
nervousness. Have you got any tips for
addressing this please?
Any
dog that is nervous (either in certain situations or in general) needs a great
deal of patience and understanding from their owner. It is unfair to constantly
subject your dog to situations that he/she is uncomfortable with. Consider
contacting a reputable behaviourist (through APBC or ABTC) to help with the
postman issue and also to help with his/her nervousness.
There
are many ways of dealing with a barking dog without resorting to punishment
(which will make a nervous dog worse) – only a reputable, qualified
behaviourist will be able to advise on how to do this without causing further
stress or trauma to your dog.
Q: I have an 18 month old female
staffy who is a lovely pup but a very excitable pup, and I mean she is
extremely excitable if people enter the garden or house ie jumping up,
sometimes she is mouthing the cuffs of clothes, or grabbing things from people’s
hands etc. This I am aware is not the greatest of behaviours and would love
some help and advice to help turn this sometimes very uncomfortable situation
around we do not have many visitors to the house which probably doesn't help
the situation but I’ve tried all the normal training routes as much as I can ie
patience training and she is a very intelligent dog and learns tricks quickly
but this all goes out the window when her excitement levels reach a peak then
she just becomes deaf to instruction.
She knows her sit, down, wait, give
paw etc but when her excitable times are upon us nothing will stop her I’m not
sure if it is because she is still in her puppy times but also my neighbours
certainly don't help as they encourage her to jump up at the walls and talk
squeakily/excitably to her from outside the gate which winds her up like a
spring etc even though i've asked them not to encourage her & even to
ignore her (I was not being mean by asking them to ignore her but it’s just to
help guide her and help her control her excitability), she is a heavy weighted
dog who doesn't seem to understand gentleness when excited which doesn't help
the situation, even my mother can no longer come to the house to visit as she
has very fragile skin that tears/bruises easily when the dog jumps at her
please help us the dog has been through puppy training/socialisation classes
also had training with 2 different trainers and myself (I in the past
have trained dogs for army and police etc and have always had dogs) but this is
still a major issue to gain control when she becomes excitable which I know is
not a good situation for her or myself.
You
have already put a great deal of time and effort into training your dog and I
do appreciate how frustrating it is when excitement takes over and she doesn’t
appear to listen. The problem here is that the situation is just too exciting
for her to be able to listen – so you have to keep practising her obedience and
tricks when there is nothing exciting happening and then start to introduce
minor distractions (and I mean very gradually) building up to the
really exciting stuff. This is going to take some time as she has had lots of
practice ignoring your requests when something more interesting/exciting is
happening.
Only
ever use positive reinforcement (with lots of tasty treats) when you are
training her and never resort to punishment of any kind for her excitability –
that would only make her realise that you really are no fun and she’d much
rather be jumping around and acting silly.
Your
neighbours are certainly not helping the situation by winding her up even more,
I wonder if they would be amenable to asking her to perform certain tricks
instead of encouraging her excitable behaviour. Giving a paw is a good start
but teach her to wave a paw when they ask her to, or to rollover or to fetch a
toy for them (just let your imagination run loose).
Q: We have a rescue dog that is
brilliant with humans but terrified of other dogs and tries to run from even
the smallest. However if they come into his space he reacts aggressively. Apart
from muzzling him we aren't sure what else to do and as he is a staffordshire
terrier we're terrified he'll be taken by the police.
Your
dog’s reaction to other dogs is due to some past experience where he has been
frightened or hurt by another dog. The reason he becomes aggressive when they
get too close is because he has now realised that he can’t run away and has to
try to scare them off instead. If this is left unresolved then there is a good
chance that your dog will just stop trying to run away and become aggressive as
soon as he sees another dog. You need to contact a reputable behaviourist
(through APBC or ABTC) who will be able to formulate a training program for
your dog. He may never become the friendliest dog in the world (to other dogs)
but the behaviourist will certainly be able to make your dog less frightened
and therefore able to enjoy his walks.
Q: I have an 8 year old female westie who has always had a hatred of the postman, anyone delivering leaflets, people with hoods up and people wearing red (like the postman). I have no letter box left on the back of my door as she has ripped it off bit by bit. She is a lovely well natured dog apart from her aggression with the above. When she sees them she just goes mental and attacks the cushions, curtains, blinds, anything she can get hold off. I can’t seem to do anything to calm her down until they are out of sight, then she goes back to being a normal loving dog. Can you please tell me if there is anything I can do to try and calm her down when she sees the postman etc.
Any advice you can give me would be greatly appreciated.
Your
dog has had many years practising this behaviour and consequently it will be
very difficult to formulate a plan to get her to accept the postman delivering
mail. The attacking and ripping of cushions etc is what we call ‘redirection’ –
this happens when the dog cannot actually get to the object of his/her fury and
so they take the frustration out on anything that is in easy reach.
I’m
sure your dog will be much happier if she never sees a postman again – consider
installing an external postbox and keep her occupied elsewhere whenever the
postman is due.
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Here is a general Behaviour
Modification Program that can be used in less severe cases of postie-reactive
dogs…
·
Introduce
the 'cookie jar'
·
Have
a special container with tasty titbits in it on the kitchen worktop.
·
Teach
your dog to go and sit by the cookie jar for a special command (eg 'sweety')
before receiving a titbit. Repeat this many times.
·
Once
your dog reliably goes to the kitchen on command (remember he must always
receive a titbit for this) then you can begin to set up situations with a
‘pretend’ postman.
·
Arrange
for somebody to come to the door and tap lightly - instead of answering the
door or going to get the mail give your dog the command and both of you go to
the kitchen. Repeat this many times.
·
Arrange
for somebody to come to the door and place a light letter through the door -
give your dog the special command and both of you go to the kitchen. Repeat
this many times.
·
From
now on, whenever the postman delivers mail, give the special command and you
and your dog go to the kitchen to sit for a treat. Once he really gets this he
will rush to the kitchen ahead of you instead of rushing to the door.
·
Take
your time about going to collect the mail, remain calm and unhurried.
·
Remember
to periodically give the 'sweety' command even when the postman isn’t around
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